For the past three days, the capital of Greece, Athens, has been rocked by demonstrations and rioting as thousands have taken to the streets in protest at the fatal shooting by a police officer of 15-year old Alexandros Grigoropoulos in the Athens district of Exarchia on December 6, 2008. The unrest quickly spread to Thessaloniki, the country's second-largest city, and other parts of the country. Clashes have also taken place in parts of Cyprus.
In central Athens, protesters, including high school and university students and anarchists, have battled riot police, smashing shop windows, burning vehicles, throwing petrol bombs and Molotov cocktails and setting public buildings on fire. Mourners and protesters also clashed with police after Grigoropoulos’ funeral on Tuesday.
The disturbances are said to be the worst to hit Greece since the collapse of military rule in 1974, and point to widespread dissatisfaction with the government of Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis which holds on to power by a one-seat majority. The main opposition party has called for early elections.
See the Wikipedia entry on the 2008 Greek riots for more information.
Twitter users have been reporting on the events using the hashtag #griots. One Twitter user, “asteris” was sending updates from Thessaloniki in the early morning hours of December 10:
asteris: “#griots Thessaloniki report: A riot squad at Syntrivani fooling around across their parked van. Teargas leftovers for 2 blocks, stung some”
asteris: “#griots Thessaloniki report: The city is spookily quiet & deserted, like a videogame level before the nasties get the jump on you”
Photos
Indymedia Athens (some English) have extensive coverage from the front lines, including dramatic photos of streets on fire, and links to video with sounds of gunfire.
A citizen journalist using the moniker Teacher Dude's BBQ on his blog, Flickr profile, and NowPublic page, has uploaded numerous photos and posts, including of his own wounds after being beaten by the police for taken photos of a demonstration. He says:
I suffered a dislocated shoulder, fractured nose and multiple cuts and bruising for taking these photos of the Greek riot police during a peaceful demonstration on September 8th, 2007, Thessaloniki, Greece.
I was detained, placed in an unmarked van by the four plain clothes cops and taken to the central police station. Later I was released without charge, but in excruciating pain and covered in blood.
ThirdEye3 on Flickr has photos of protesters holding posters with a photoshopped image of a gun to protest the police shooting, and a photo set tagged #griots.
dkilim has photos of post-rioting devastation.
There are many more photos on the Flickr pages of tom.tziros, Λεωνίδας, and murplej@ne – under deconstruction (this photographer also has a blog at Trainstorming).
Videos
Sameer Padania from WITNESS’ human rights video website The HUB happens to be in Athens for a media conference and has uploaded more than a dozen brief videos of what he saw on the streets.
Videoonthecloud has uploaded a couple of videos to YouTube, including this one of police throwing a stone at a protester.
There are many more videos to be found on YouTube by searching for #griots.
Georgia Popplewell and Renata Avila contributed text and links for this post.
29 comments
Greek authoritarianism reached a new low, today, after the tear-gassing of a peaceful gathering of students outside the Central Police Headquarters in Athens…Later, a musicians’ march (more like a happening with music) was tear-gassed too…Whose idea is that these heavy-handed tactics will make corruption, unemployment, oppression, nepotism, the minor humiliations of everyday life in Greece, and the anger they cause, to go away?
An update on a tumultuous week: Greek state TV is occupied (on December 13th, covered by BBC). Another student is shot by an unknowns- fortunately, this time he is lightly injured. More violence on Thursday, and then today’s events, which verge on the surreal – the police used its usual heavy-handed tactics to defend the city’s Christmas tree, against a group of 50 teenagers who thought that it is a symbol of an inappropriate celebration when a generation mourns…I am being reminded of Howard Zinn’s beautiful definition of civil disobedience:
“Civil disobedience is the deliberate, discriminate, violation of law for a vital social purpose. It becomes not only justifiable but necessary when a fundamental human right is at stake, and when legal channels are inadequate for securing that right…”